Posted on 02/22/2002 7:55:32 AM PST by LavaDog
MRC Study: Five Times More Coverage of Bushs Rhetoric Than Iran, Iraq or North Korean Policies
Condemning Bush, Not Interested In Evil
In the three weeks since President Bush labeled Iran, Iraq and North Korea an "axis of evil" which threatens the free world, the ABC, CBS and NBC evening news programs have spent relatively little time reporting on the nature and threat posed by those regimes, emphasizing the "controversy" over the statement itself, a Media Research Center study has determined.
MRC analysts reviewed all 37 network stories which discussed the "axis of evil" on World News Tonight, the CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News from January 30 (the day after Bushs State of the Union address) through February 19. Only five of those stories (14%) focused on Iraq, Iran or North Korea themselves, compared with 73% whose main focus was negative reaction to the Presidents declaration.
In framing their stories, reporters invariably cast the "axis" comment as incendiary and counter-productive. Out of 19 "talking heads" invited by reporters to react to the administrations policy, 89 percent condemned Bushs statement. (This excludes both the summarized views of Iraqi, Iranian and North Korean officials, plus administration explanations of the "axis" policy.)
# On January 30, NBCs Jim Miklaszewski showed both a Republican (Senator Chuck Hagel) and a Democrat (former Rep. Lee Hamilton) condemning Bushs statement, but broadcast no supportive soundbites. That same night, ABCs Jim Wooten described the Iranians as "genuinely astonished" by the "axis of evil" label. "Thousands of Iranians took part in pro-U.S. demonstrations here after September 11," he declared, but "whatever goodwill may have been generated, they say, has now evaporated in the heat of the indictment from President Bush."
# On January 31, ABCs Terry Moran waited in vain for a presidential retraction: "The President didnt back down from his threats against the countries hes dubbed the axis of evil....The Presidents rhetoric continues to escalate."
# On February 11, all three anchors linked Bushs remark to government-organized protests in Iran. CBSs Dan Rather credited the rally as being "the biggest anti-American demonstration there in years." Peter Jennings called the rally "gigantic," adding that "millions of people do not like being referred to as evil" shifting the focus of Bushs statement from the totalitarian regime to its victims. Wooten described Iran as "probably the most democratic Islamic country on earth, with an elected president and parliament. And yet, its Supreme Leader...is a Muslim cleric unelected, yet in terms of authority, unchallenged." A democracy with an unchallenged Supreme Leader?
# On February 15, NBCs Andrea Mitchell, in a story on Secretary of State Colin Powell, declared that "the axis of evil rhetoric [is] not supported by most diplomats."
# On February 16, as Bush left for Japan, South Korea and China, NBCs Brian Williams misleadingly declared him "en route to a part of the world he recently branded, as youll recall, an axis of evil." ABCs Mark Litke highlighted "angry South Koreans, and not just the usual student demonstrators, also accusing Bush of arrogance for taking the path of confrontation with the North."
# On February 18, CBSs John Roberts reported that in South Korea, "radical students denounced President Bush as a death merchant." He then summarized an interview with an ex-Clinton administration official: "Veteran negotiator Bob Gallucci, who in 1994 convinced North Korea to put its nuclear program on hold, says the harsh rhetoric is a prescription for deadlock."
# On February 19, ABCs Jennings talked about Bushs "belief" that North Korea is a threat: "Mr. Bush believes the North is not only repressive, but dangerous....The Presidents belief is causing some anxiety in the South." ABC and NBC quoted only Bush critics; CBSs Roberts was the only reporter who revealed that many Koreans support the President: "Mr. Bush is getting full support from opposition lawmakers, who argue the North needs to be seen for what it is."
This is also another example about how the news media only cover the politics rather than the substance or reality of the situation. They do this ALL THE TIME with legislation. Hardly ever mention the issues involved (look at CFR) but only look at the political ramifications. It is all just a game in their eyes, no matter how grave the consequences be it limits on free speech or national security.
God, I hate the press.
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